Question / Help Can't record above 60FPS with any record software

Marvin Saelens

New Member
So, I've tried to fix this problem. But my computer must be able to support 240FPS. But it doesn't. If i record it says: "CPU:7.2-24.8%, 120,00 fps". And if i try to watch it, it just cuts frames out. Its really wierd. And I've tried to fix it. But i can record at 60fps with no lagg. But above that it starts to cut out frames. I hope you guys can help me with this because it's really anoying I've tried Action cracked, Fraps and OBS Studio. But none of them work above 60 fps.

PS: I Have A GeForce GTX 1060 6GB. So i should be able to record 120fps with it.

Thank you for taking your time for this,
 
Last edited:

Marvin Saelens

New Member
That's because your PC can't handle it. Recording at 240fps is ridiculously high.
It can, because i play munecraft and there i get around 400-600 fps while recording and if i dont i get 400-1100fps and my friend has the same pc but with had bad processor and he can record in it.
 

Marvin Saelens

New Member
Post a logfile

22:03:22: No Intel graphics adapter visible in QSVHelper.exe, Optimus problem?
22:03:22: CUDA loaded successfully
22:03:22: 1 CUDA capable devices found
22:03:22: [ GPU #0 - < GeForce GTX 1060 6GB > has Compute SM 6.1, NVENC Available ]

This is all there is
 

Marvin Saelens

New Member
These are my specs if you need them




Processor:

Name
Core i5-6402P
Manufacturer
Intel
Speed
3.40 GHz
Category
Performance
Generation
13th
Brand
Core i5 6th Gen
Cores
4

Graphics
Name
GeForce GTX 1060
Manufacturer
NVIDIA
Category
High Performance
Generation
21
Operating system:

Microsoft Windows 10 (build 16299), 64-bit
Tests Run
3,553,382 in April 2018
Rank
Out of 3,553,382 tests, your Windows version is in a group of 2,338,332 (65.8 %).
 

koala

Active Member
It's useless to record above 60 fps. Your monitor and 99% of your audience has the capability to display at 60 Hz, that is a maximum of 60 fps. Even if you had a video with 200 fps, you would not see more than 60 frames a second on a 60 Hz monitor. The additional 140 frames out of the 200 are simply not visible. For the same reason, it's not needed to get over 60 fps in any game - it's not possible to get the surplus frames on screen. They are wasted.
There are gaming monitors who are able to display more than 60 fps. They usually go up to 140 fps. As long as you don't have one, the above applies. Even if you have one, gaming with 140 fps is nice, but videos with more than 60 fps are unusual. It's considered a waste of resources.
 

Marvin Saelens

New Member
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2vQFurQRKKs&t=3s
It's useless to record above 60 fps. Your monitor and 99% of your audience has the capability to display at 60 Hz, that is a maximum of 60 fps. Even if you had a video with 200 fps, you would not see more than 60 frames a second on a 60 Hz monitor. The additional 140 frames out of the 200 are simply not visible. For the same reason, it's not needed to get over 60 fps in any game - it's not possible to get the surplus frames on screen. They are wasted.
There are gaming monitors who are able to display more than 60 fps. They usually go up to 140 fps. As long as you don't have one, the above applies. Even if you have one, gaming with 140 fps is nice, but videos with more than 60 fps are unusual. It's considered a waste of resources.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2vQFurQRKKs&t=3s its mutch smoother
 

cmdrtigerking

New Member
It's useless to record above 60 fps. Your monitor and 99% of your audience has the capability to display at 60 Hz, that is a maximum of 60 fps. Even if you had a video with 200 fps, you would not see more than 60 frames a second on a 60 Hz monitor. The additional 140 frames out of the 200 are simply not visible. For the same reason, it's not needed to get over 60 fps in any game - it's not possible to get the surplus frames on screen. They are wasted.
There are gaming monitors who are able to display more than 60 fps. They usually go up to 140 fps. As long as you don't have one, the above applies. Even if you have one, gaming with 140 fps is nice, but videos with more than 60 fps are unusual. It's considered a waste of resources.
How is it useless if you are using the high fps footage in editing software to obtain smoother more fluid slow-motion shots... please telle me.
 
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